See Site links and related links

This file is an excerpt from the September 1997 version of Mark Israel's AUE FAQ.
The file was re-generated Friday 23 January 2004 01:36 GMT.
To see the full AUE FAQ at Mark Israel's Web site, click here.

Why do we say "30 years old", but "a 30-year-old man"?
------------------------------------------------------
by Rich Alderson

   This pattern goes all the way back to Old English (alias
Anglo-Saxon).  It's the same reason many of us say that someone is

"5 foot 2" rather than "5 feet 2".

   The source of the idiom is the old genitive plural, which did not
end in -s, and did not contain a high front vowel to trigger umlaut
("foot" vs "feet").  When the ending was lost because of regular
phonetic developments, the pattern remained the same, and it now
seemed that the singular rather than the plural was in use.

See Site links and related links